Lark, the company that makes the wearable sleep monitor of the same name, unveiled that device’s successor on Monday: a new $150 accessory called Larklife.

“In our next phase, we’re not just helping people sleep better; we’re helping people with the rest of their lives, and what matters to them most,” Lark CEO Julia Hu told Macworld. Larklife, like the original Lark which worked only when its user was sleeping, is a wearable device. But the new model is meant to be worn both day and night, and tracks not just sleep, but also steps, exercise, and—to a limited degree—diet.

You're meant to wear the Larklife on your wrist full-time. To make that possible, the unit actually consists of three unique parts. Hu describes them as “a sleek daytime band, a soft pajama nighttime band, and the removable wristband sensor.” You charge the bands themselves, and then move the sensor between the two. That way, one band’s always charging as you wear the other—”so you never have any downtime,” Hu says.

Larklife won’t be the first device to track sleep, steps, and the like; the Nike+ FuelBand, Fitbit, and (currently unavailable) Jawbone Up all offer similar functionality. Lark aims to differentiate the Larklife on both the hardware and software side.

Beyond the clever dual-strap approach, “it’s one of the first Bluetooth Low Energy (BTLE) products out there,” Hu said, referring to the newer Bluetooth technology that draws less energy and can sync more passively. BTLE is also used by the new Fitbit Zip. Hu says that technology is hugely important to the Larklife.

“If you don’t sync [a fitness tracking device] every day, if you sync it every two days—behavior change doesn’t work that way,” Hu said. “Behavior change is about celebrating small victories at the time you achieve them; it’s about instant feedback. When you did something good yesterday, but now you’re seeing it 24 hours later, it doesn’t trigger anything in your brain to say ‘keep on going with the good thing.’” Put simply, Hu explains, “When a dog does something good, you don’t give him a cookie six hours later.” Thus, the advantage of BTLE is that “it allows for real time feedback.” When you take your thousandth step of the day, for example, the Larklife can signal your iPhone instantly, spurring an on-screen notification cheering your achievement.

Because of the combination of data that the Larklife gathers, Hu said, it can offer advice that draws on several disciplines: “It’s as if there’s a fitness trainer, a nutritionist, a productivity coach, and a sleep coach, all working together in the background.” For example, the Larklife app might note, “You didn’t sleep much last night, and you already walked a lot today, so try to eat some protein this morning.”

Tracking diet with the Larklife takes an interesting approach; Hu calls it “one tap diet tracking.” Anytime you eat, you tap the Larklife on your wrist once, and the wristband instantly communicates to your phone to log that you’re eating. When you have more time, you can go into the app and track specifically what you ate. “By making it more simple and knowing what times—and how often—you ate during the day,” Hu said, “we can give you a lot of great tips.”

The Larklife app’s interface might confound you at first. The screen shows goals and habits of yours that you haven’t yet achieved each day, the coach in the center offering advice on what you should do next, alongside achievement badges you’ve earned during the day. At the bottom, you’ll see what you accomplished yesterday.

Hu said that both the app and the Larklife device leverage algorithms to calculate the best, most usable, and actionable data: “We’ve been using machine learning to ensure that our accelerometer is actually many more times accurate than what’s out on the market; it’s not just a pedometer” measuring your steps. And the app can calculate information based on your measured circadian rhythms and energy levels, and use that to advise you when to relax, when to eat, and when to, say, work on something mentally challenging.

Like the original Lark, the Larklife also can wake you up in the morning, by vibrating on your wrist at your preselected time. The accessory doesn’t offer the so-called “optimal wakeup” feature available from some other sleep accessories; such a feature has you specify a 30-minute wake up window, and wakes you at the time it detects you’re in the best phase of sleep to be roused. “What’s best for you is a little bit of extra sleep,” Hu said. “We created a way to do that naturally, in a way that is much less jarring than regular alarm clocks, thereby taking away most of the pain of waking up already, so we just do it at the right time—the time you set.”

Though Hu wouldn’t offer an exact date for when the Larklife will start shipping, she promised it would be “before the holiday season.”

This story, "Lark unveils new $150 Larklife for monitoring sleep, steps, and more" was originally published by
TechHive.

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Lex uses a MacBook Pro, an iPhone 5, an iPad mini, a Kindle 3, a TiVo HD, and a treadmill desk, and loves them all. His latest book, a children's book parody for adults, is called "The Kid in the Crib." Lex lives in New Jersey with his wife and three young kids.